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ECON 2020—Macroeconomics
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Assignment Designation:
Replace this text with the assignment designation (Chapter 13)
Question 1: What are government’s fiscal policy options for ending severe demand-pull
inflation? Use the aggregate demand-aggregate supply model to show the impact of these
policies on the price level. Which of these fiscal policy options do you think might be favored by
a person who wants to preserve the size of government? A person who thinks the public sector is
too large?
Answer:
Options are to reduce government spending, increase taxes, or some combination of both. See
Figure 13.2. If the price level is flexible downward, it will fall. In the real world, the goal is to
reduce inflation—to keep prices from rising so rapidly—not to reduce the price level. A person
wanting to preserve the size of government might favor a tax hike and would want to preserve
government-spending programs. Someone who thinks that the public sector is too large might
favor cuts in government spending since this would reduce the size of government.
Question 2: Explain how built-in (or automatic) stabilizers work. What are the differences
between proportional, progressive, and regressive tax systems as they relate to an economy’s
built-in stability?
Answer:
In a phrase, “net tax revenues vary directly with GDP.” When GDP is rising so are tax
collections, both income taxes and sales taxes. At the same time, government payouts—transfer
payments such as unemployment compensation, and welfare—are decreasing. Since net taxes are
taxes less transfer payments, net taxes definitely rise with GDP, which dampens the rise in GDP.
On the other hand, when GDP drops in a recession, tax collections slow down or actually
diminish while transfer payments rise quickly. Thus, net taxes decrease along with GDP, which
softens the decline in GDP.
A progressive tax system would have the most stabilizing effect of the three tax systems
and the regressive tax would have the least built-in stability. This follows from the previous
paragraph. A progressive tax increases at an increasing rate as incomes rise, thus having more of
a dampening effect on rising incomes and expenditures than would either a proportional or
regressive tax. The latter rate would rise more slowly than the rate of increase in GDP with the
least effect of the three types. Conversely, in an economic slowdown, a progressive tax falls
faster because not only does it decline with income, it becomes proportionately less as incomes
fall. This acts as a cushion on declining incomes—the tax bite is less, which leaves more of the
lower income for spending. The reverse would be true of a regressive tax that falls, but more
slowly than the progressive tax, as incomes decline.
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ECON 2020—Macroeconomics
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